Yes, and you've put it in the right place
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
No, there is no apostrophe on any word.
The plural is summers. (no apostrophe!)
Where the apostrophe goes in the word "members" depends on how you intend to use it. If it simply meant to be pluralized, there is no apostrophe. For example: The members decided to leave. If it is meant to be singular possessive, the apostrophe goes after the r. For example: The member's fees were not paid. If you mean to make it plural possessive, the apostrophe goes after the s. For example: The members' retreat was extremely relaxing.
Yes, there is an apostrophe in "MPs" which stands for "Members of Parliament". The apostrophe is used to indicate the omission of the letters "em" in "Member".
Whats the genre for summer Ball
Use an apostrophe to indicate the following: Possession - This is the boy's ball Contraction - I can't believe that! Omission - His name is O'Hara
The Penguin group published Summer Ball
Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe and the letter 's to the noun (e.g., the dog's ball). However, if the noun is plural and already ends in s, you just add an apostrophe (e.g., the dogs' ball). In the case of singular nouns ending in s, you can choose to add 's or just an apostrophe (e.g., James's car or James' car).
Mike Lupica wrote "Summer Ball."
To show possession using an apostrophe, add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) after the noun. For example, "Sarah's book" signifies that the book belongs to Sarah. If the noun is already plural and ends in "s," you can just add an apostrophe after the "s," like in "the teachers' lounge."
The simple basic rule is :- For the singular - add 's (apostrophe s): The boy's ball or the ball of the boy.- For plural words ending in s - add ' (apostrophe only): The boys' ball or the ball of the boys. Plural nouns that do not end in S use the apostrophe-s form (e.g. children's).The most common error is to add apostrophe-s to a pronoun to show possession, as in "it's cover". This is wrong, pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession.. The correct form is "its cover". Only use it's to mean it is.